On 9-Mar-09, at 3:55 PM, Ivan Sergio Borgonovo wrote:
On Mon, 09 Mar 2009 11:53:32 -0500 Michael Favia <michael@favias.org> wrote:
and get to work (myself included). If you don't know how and want to learn how just ask in channel and I'll be happy to help you personally. -mf
I'd like to know how. I've tons of questions that will make my work better, faster and more drupal friendly.
I'm coding and I would like to be able to just concentrate on coding. But I'm not coding in the hyperuranium, we are coding for a project in a community.
Is really IRC the best place where to share this knowledge?
I just guess there are thousands way to get more productive in the "drupal environment".
I'm still catching up while I'm making my mammoth module ready for public consumption. It finally saw the light 3-4 weeks ago (in production on 2 websites) but for a long series of reasons it's not ready for public consumption and I'm scared there are so many things to clean up to make it of "general" use that I won't be able to catch up with the community changes once put it in public consumption.
One thing is writing your own stuff for your own itch, one thing is being productive inside a community project.
I've been lucky enough I ran in very few problems in drupal code. I'm on the old stable and I reported the few glitches I came across sometimes with snippet of code.
Other than IRC is there a place where to learn how to set up a development and testing environment?
The http://drupal.org/getting-involved section of the handbook has most of the information centralized. I would suggest reading through the "Contribute code" subsection (http://drupal.org/node/10259) and either editing pages directly or creating issues in the Documentation queue for places where things are unclear. -Angie